A spokesperson for the tech giant told The Post on Wednesday night that they contacted the feds and “offered assistance” with opening the cellular device, but nobody has gotten back to them.

“We were shocked and saddened by the violence in Texas last Sunday,” the spokesperson said. “Our team immediately reached out to the FBI after learning from their press conference on Tuesday that investigators were trying to access a mobile phone. We offered assistance and said we would expedite our response to any legal process they send us.”

While the company has tried to help with the investigation of shooter Devin Kelley, like they have with many others, the spokesperson says they have yet to hear back from anyone.

“We work with law enforcement every day,” they said. “We offer training to thousands of agents so they understand our devices and how they can quickly request information from Apple.”

The company claims that it could have helped preserve access to the data on the young man’s phone, if the FBI had only contacted them when they first got its hands on it.

Specifically, investigators would have been told to use Kelley’s finger to access the phone before the device automatically shuts off the fingerprint sensor. If the user hasn’t used the phone in the last 48 hours, it reportedly initiates this feature.

Phone ​encryption has been a longstanding problem for the​​ feds — with the Justice Department finding itself knee-deep in controversy last year when it went head to head with Apple during the San Bernandino shooting investigation.

Federal investigators had been trying to gain access to terrorist Syed Farook’s phone, but were unable to, so they got a court order forcing Apple to assist. The company initially refused and went public with its legal fight. The FBI was later able to open the phone on its own and dropped the case.

Kelley’s phone — which may help uncover gunman Devin Kelley’s motive — has been sent off to Quantico.